Augusta Military Academy

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Augusta_Military_Academy an entity of type: Thing

The Augusta Military Academy (AMA) was a secondary education military academy in Fort Defiance, Virginia, United States. The school was established in 1865 by Confederate veteran Charles Summerville Roller as the Augusta Male Academy and formally became a military academy in 1880. It combined classical studies with a military curriculum and was officially named Augusta Military Academy in 1890. At the time, it was one of the first military preparatory schools in the Commonwealth of Virginia. It was one of the first such schools in the United States to adopt the Junior Reserve Officers' Training Corps program in 1919. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Augusta Military Academy
rdf:langString Augusta Military Academy
rdf:langString Augusta Military Academy
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xsd:integer 6612556
xsd:integer 1118275318
xsd:date 1983-02-10
rdf:langString Gothic, Neo-Gothic
rdf:langString Collins, T.J.
rdf:langString Main Barracks, August 2006
rdf:langString Virginia Landmarks Register
xsd:date 1982-09-16
rdf:langString bottom
xsd:integer 7
rdf:langString North of Staunton on U.S. 11, Fort Defiance, Virginia
rdf:langString Virginia#USA
xsd:integer 83003258
xsd:string 38.2375 -78.97694444444444
rdf:langString The Augusta Military Academy (AMA) was a secondary education military academy in Fort Defiance, Virginia, United States. The school was established in 1865 by Confederate veteran Charles Summerville Roller as the Augusta Male Academy and formally became a military academy in 1880. It combined classical studies with a military curriculum and was officially named Augusta Military Academy in 1890. At the time, it was one of the first military preparatory schools in the Commonwealth of Virginia. It was one of the first such schools in the United States to adopt the Junior Reserve Officers' Training Corps program in 1919. Until its closure in 1984, the Academy had attracted over 7,000 students from the United States and abroad. Today it is owned and operated as a campground for the Virginia District of the United Pentecostal Church International. It is located on U.S. Route 11, also known as the Lee Highway.
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